Pruett tied Hurley Haywood's record of five overall wins in the twice-around-
the-clock event at Daytona International Speedway. The 52-year-old Pruett
shared driving duties with his Grand-Am Road Racing teammate, Memo Rojas, as
well as NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Juan Pablo Montoya and IndyCar Series
competitor Charlie Kimball in Ganassi's No. 01 BMW/Riley.

Pruett is a record five-time Grand-Am Rolex Daytona Prototype champion. He and
Rojas have won the DP title with Ganassi the past three years.

Montoya drove the No. 01 car during the final hours of the race, crossing the
finish line 22 seconds ahead of Max Angelelli, who was behind the wheel of the
No. 10 Corvette for Wayne Taylor Racing. Jordan Taylor and reigning IndyCar
champion Ryan Hunter-Reay shared driving duties with Angelelli in the No. 10
car.

Montoya, Pruett, Rojas and Kimball combined for 709 laps around the 3.56-mile
a race that featured a record 74 lead changes.

Chip Ganassi's fifth win in the Rolex 24 came in his 10th attempt.

With just over an hour remaining in the race, a full-course caution bunched up
the frontrunners. A.J. Allmendinger, a NASCAR competitor, grabbed the lead
during a round of pit stops before the caution. Montoya ran back in the fourth
spot for the restart, but quickly charged his way up front before passing
Angelelli in the closing laps. Allmendinger, who won last year's Rolex 24 with
Michael Shank Racing, ended up finishing third.

Marcos Ambrose, who is also a Sprint Cup regular, shared driving duties with
Allmendinger in Shank's No. 60 Ford/Riley. Oswaldo Negri Jr., John Pew and
Justin Wilson also drove the car.
Daytona road course, in